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Ivanhoe's revised report reduces copper production forecast for 2026 at DRC mine

Ivanhoe Mines announced on Tuesday that an updated independent study has lowered the near-term production estimate for the company's copper?complex in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The 'technical report', which supports the Canadian miner’s plan to increase production at the Kamoa Kakula complex has lowered the estimate of 2026 copper anode output to a range between 290,000 and 330,000 tonnes. The outlook for 2027 was also reduced to between 380,000 and 420,000 tonnes.

Kamoa-Kakula is one of the highest-grade copper projects in the world. It has become a major growth source for a market with limited supply and limited new project development.

The company has a plan to increase the annual production of copper at the complex from 50,000 tonnes to over 500,000 tonnes by 2028.

The latest mineral reserve estimate was 466 millions tonnes of ore with a copper grade of 2.82%, which contained 13.1 million tonnes?of copper.

Copper, which is widely used in construction and power, will benefit from the?demand for electric vehicles and grid investments, as well as the rapid 'build-out' of datacenters to support the surge in artificial Intelligence usage.

Ivanhoe said that following the recommendations in the technical report it has begun a new feasibility analysis. It is expected to finish?within a year, with drilling and mapping to start during the second quarter 2026. (Reporting by Dharna Bafna in Bengaluru; Editing by Leroy Leo)

(source: Reuters)